State of Hospitality Software in Spain 2026
Comprehensive analysis of the technology market for restaurants, bars and hotels in Spain. Market data, digitalization levels, emerging trends and real implementation costs.
Key findings
Spain's hospitality sector is at a digital tipping point. These are the four most relevant data points from our analysis.
According to INE data, Spain has over 280,000 food service establishments, making it one of the largest hospitality markets in Europe.
The global Restaurant Management Software market is growing at 16-17% CAGR (2024-2030), driven by demand for operational efficiency.
Approximately 7 out of 10 restaurants in Spain still manage schedules and shifts manually or with basic spreadsheets.
Segment V companies in the Kit Digital program can access grants of up to EUR 29,000 to fund their digital transformation.
The hospitality software market in Spain
Spain is the third European country by number of food service establishments, but technology adoption still lags behind markets like the UK, France or Germany.
Market size
According to Spain's National Statistics Institute (INE), the country has over 280,000 restaurants and food service establishments, including traditional restaurants, fast food chains, cafes, bars with kitchens, and catering services. Add to this more than 250,000 bars and beverage establishments, forming a hospitality ecosystem of over half a million businesses.
Hospitality accounts for approximately 6.2% of Spain's GDP and directly employs more than 1.7 million workers, according to Hosteleria de España. This economic weight makes the sector one of the largest potential customers for technology solutions in Southern Europe.
However, market fragmentation is notable: 85% of establishments are micro-businesses with fewer than 10 employees, which poses a challenge for technology adoption and is a determining factor in the type of solutions that succeed in this segment.
Global restaurant tech growth
The global Restaurant Management Software market is valued at approximately $6.2 billion in 2025, with projections placing its growth between 16% and 17% CAGR through 2030, according to Grand View Forschung and Mordor Intelligence reports.
Spain represents around 3.3% of the global restaurant tech market, a relatively low share compared to the weight of its hospitality sector worldwide. This gap between the sector's importance and its digitalization level represents a significant market opportunity.
Key growth drivers include delivery channel integration, staff management automation, digital payment adoption, and increasingly, the incorporation of artificial intelligence to optimize operations and improve customer experience.
Kit Digital: the public funding lever
The Spanish Government's Kit Digital program, co-funded with EU Next Generation funds, offers grants of up to EUR 29,000 for Segment V companies (50-249 employees) and grants of EUR 6,000 for micro-businesses with 1-2 employees. Eligible categories include web presence, e-commerce, process management, secure communications and cybersecurity.
For the hospitality sector, this translates into the possibility of implementing a modern POS, online booking system, inventory management, or a workforce management platform with partial or full public funding, reducing the barrier to entry for digitalization.
Digitalization level of Spanish hospitality
The landscape reveals a sector with enormous differences: large chains with advanced digitalization versus a fabric of micro-businesses with basic or nonexistent tools.
POS system type used
Estimated percentage of restaurants by point-of-sale terminal type
Sources: estimates based on Hosteleria de España, ICE data, and sector market analysis.
Shift and staff management
How Spanish restaurants organize employee schedules
Sources: sector surveys, Randstad Hospitality data, and proprietary analysis.
Restaurant digital presence
Digital channels used by Spanish restaurants to attract customers
Sources: The NPD Group, Kantar Worldpanel, and public data from delivery platforms.
Top 5 most-used tools
Software categories with highest penetration in Spanish hospitality
Sources: sector surveys and public data from technology providers.
The analysis reveals a sector with dual digitalization: on one hand, large restaurant chains (such as McDonald's, Burger King, Telepizza or 100 Montaditos) operate with complex and advanced technology stacks, integrating cloud POS, AI-powered workforce management, CRM, business intelligence and omnichannel platforms. On the other, the vast majority of independent restaurants —representing more than 80% of the hospitality fabric— operate with basic tools or no specialized software at all.
Shift management is the area with the largest digitalization deficit: only 12% of establishments use specialized software, while 45% still rely on WhatsApp, paper or physical whiteboards. This gap creates significant inefficiencies in a sector where employee turnover can exceed 70% annually.
Regarding digital presence, dependence on aggregators (Glovo, UberEats, Just Eat) is notable: 44% of restaurants only have a digital presence through these platforms, paying commissions of 20-35% per order. Creating proprietary channels (web with online ordering, own app) remains an under-exploited opportunity that would improve margins and build a direct customer relationship.
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Kostenlose Beratung →Technologie trends for hospitality in 2026
The five macro-trends redefining how restaurants and hotels operate in Spain and Europe.
AI agents for reservations and customer service
AI agents are surpassing basic chatbots. In 2026, forward-thinking restaurants already deploy conversational agents capable of managing reservations, modifications, cancellations and menu recommendations in natural language, by voice or text, 24/7. These agents integrate with the POS, booking system and CRM to offer personalized experiences. The key lies in their ability to act (not just respond): an agent can block a table, send email confirmation, and adjust kitchen demand forecasts, all in a single interaction.
Voice-first interfaces in the kitchen
Voice interfaces are gaining traction in environments where workers' hands are occupied: kitchens, warehouses and bars. Voice-based orders, hands-free recipe lookup, allergen alerts and kitchen-to-front communication are use cases with growing adoption. Improved Spanish voice recognition models in noisy environments make this technology viable for daily restaurant operations, not just experiments.
AI-powered workforce management
AI-assisted shift planning is one of the fastest-growing areas. Lösungen like Orquest (a Spanish success story, now operating in 42 markets with clients like McDonald's and Zara) use algorithms that optimize staff allocation based on demand forecasts, labor law compliance, employee preferences and costs. In a sector with 70% turnover, generating optimal schedules in seconds (instead of hours) is a real competitive advantage.
POS + delivery + inventory integration
Technologie fragmentation has been one of the digital restaurateur's biggest frustrations: a POS that doesn't talk to the delivery platform, inventory in another spreadsheet, and a separate CRM. In 2026, the trend is clear: all-in-one platforms or integration middleware (like Deliverect, Hubrise or custom solutions) that unify POS, multi-brand delivery, real-time inventory, accounting and reporting in a single dashboard.
Sustainability and digital traceability
European regulations (Farm to Fork, EUDR) and growing consumer demand for transparency are driving adoption of digital traceability solutions. Software that tracks the origin of every ingredient, calculates menu carbon footprint, manages food waste with predictive AI, and generates automated ESG reports. This trend is especially relevant for premium hospitality and chains with sustainability commitments.
These trends are not independent: they reinforce each other. A restaurant that implements an AI reservation agent obtains richer data to feed its workforce management system. POS-delivery-inventory integration generates the data needed for predictive AI to optimize purchasing and reduce waste. Digital traceability, in turn, relies on the same integrated data infrastructure.
Spanish hospitality businesses that adopt these technologies in a coordinated manner —not as isolated solutions— will be the ones achieving a lasting competitive advantage. At Soamee, we help our clients design this integrated technology architecture, connecting existing systems with new AI and automation capabilities.
Hospitality digitalization costs
Market price ranges for the main categories of hospitality software and technology services in Spain. Data collected from public sources and sector providers.
Modern POS / TPV (cloud)
Includes SaaS license, touch terminal, table management, kitchen integration and basic reporting. Premium solutions with advanced BI can exceed EUR 300/mo per location. Examples: Lightspeed, Square, Revo, Last.app.
Shift management (SaaS)
Workforce management software with schedule planning, time tracking, regulatory compliance and, at the high end, AI-powered predictive optimization. Examples: Orquest, Factorial, Sesame.
Custom delivery/booking app
Custom native or hybrid app with ordering system, payment gateway, push notifications, management panel and POS integration. Range depends on complexity and customization level.
Complete platform (all-in-one)
Complete digital ecosystem: POS, delivery, bookings, CRM, workforce management, inventory, BI, accounting and ERP integrations. Multi-location projects with scalable architecture and AI modules.
Spanish restaurant tech success stories
Spanish companies leading the digital transformation of the hospitality sector, proving that well-applied technology generates real results.
Orquest
42 markets | McDonald's, ZaraSpanish AI-powered workforce management platform that optimizes shift planning for major retail and hospitality chains. Their algorithm processes labor law, demand forecasts, and employee preferences to generate optimal schedules in seconds. Operating in 42 international markets with clients like McDonald's, Zara and Carrefour, managing over 350,000 employees.
GOXO by Dabiz Munoz
Premium delivery from 3-Michelin-star chefPremium delivery platform created by chef Dabiz Munoz (DiverXO, 3 Michelin stars). GOXO proves that delivery doesn't have to mean low-quality fast food: it offers high-cuisine gastronomic experiences adapted to home delivery, with a technology system managing cold logistics, premium ingredient traceability, and digital unboxing experience.
Xceed
10M+ attendees | 125+ citiesSpanish nightlife and events platform that has digitized the going-out experience in over 125 cities. With more than 10 million annual attendees, Xceed manages guest lists, tickets, VIP tables and CRM for nightclubs and entertainment venues. Their AI recommendation engine personalizes each user's experience based on preferences, history, and location.
How we compiled this report
This report is based on publicly available data from: Spain's National Statistics Institute (INE), Hosteleria de España, Grand View Forschung, Mordor Intelligence, The NPD Group, Kantar Worldpanel, Randstad, public information from the Kit Digital program (Red.es), sector reports from the Spanish Hospitality Federation, and public data from the companies mentioned (Orquest, Xceed, GOXO).
Digitalization level estimates are based on published sector surveys, hospitality association data, and proprietary analysis cross-referencing multiple sources. Where exact data is unavailable, figures are indicated as estimates with ranges provided instead of single data points.
This report is published for informational and educational purposes. Data is presented in good faith and with the highest possible rigor, but does not constitute professional advice. For technology investment decisions, we recommend verifying with primary sources and consulting sector specialists.
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